The Invasive Species Council says they are concerned the NSW Budget has taken funding out of feral animal control and funnelled into the scientifically discredited bounty scheme and a new hunter propaganda unit, done as part of a political deal with the Shooters Party.
The Council does, however, welcome the NSW government’s move to lock in 4 years of funding for the Weeds Action Program – a structural reform that will finally bring some stability to one of the state’s most underfunded biosecurity programs.
‘Today’s NSW Budget is one step forward for weed management, but a step back for feral animal management,’ Invasive Species Council CEO Jack Gough said.
‘Our fears that the NSW Premier had done a dodgy deal with the Shooters Party that will impact feral animal control have been realised with funding allocated to a new Hunting Authority, even before the Shooters’ Bill establishing it has passed the parliament. .
‘This will have impacts for the scale of feral animal management on the ground and is the complete opposite of the Natural Resource Commission’s recent recommendation of multi-year, increased and more strategic funding to make a difference.
‘By contrast, the Minister Moriarty’s move to lock in 4 years of funding for the Weeds Action Program is a win for common sense and good management. It’s a welcome response to what we advocated in the lead-up to the last state election – and we appreciate the Minister’s leadership in acting on this.
‘This Budget is a mixed bag. We acknowledge the positive shift on weed funding – a long-overdue reform that reflects what the sector has been crying out for. But it’s not enough to fix one part of the system while allowing others to fall further behind. NSW needs a comprehensive, science-led approach to invasive species and biosecurity, not piecemeal deals and political bargaining chips.’
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